|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
In recent years the Standard Model of electroweak interactions has
successfully passed a number of crucial tests, most notably in
neutral current reactions and through the observation of W- and
Z-bosons in proton-antiproton collisions. How ever, experiments are
only beginning to verify one of the most basic consequences of its
theoretical formulation as a local quantum field theory: quantum
corrections as calculated in perturbation theory. Measurements that
will be carried out at electron positron colliders at Stanford and
CERN in the very near future will improve the accuracy by more than
an order of magnitude. Thus either these crucial elements of the
present theoretical framework will be confirmed or the road to
physics beyond the Standard Model will be opened. A huge amount of
theoretical work has been invested during the past few years to
match the envisaged experimental precision. QED corrections, in
particular from initial state radiation, will playa dominant role
in the interpretation of measurements and have to be understood at
a hitherto unrivalled level of accuracy. Analytical cal culations -
either to a fixed order in a or by summing large logarithms to
arbitrary order - are complementary to recent developments of Monte
Carlo techniques in the simulation of events with multiple photon
emission. Measurements with hadronic final states evidently require
the understanding of hadronic corrections to high accu racy. Even
purely leptonic reactions are influenced by hadronic interactions
through vacuum polarization.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.